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Apr 9, 2013
04/13
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jim amos is the first aviator to be appointed to that position. he has gone through leadership on every level from the university of idaho and he has commanded every level he had to commanding squadrons he commanded air group 31 and the third marine air wing and the combat development command. and this happened to be the commandant of the marine corps gentlemen, thank you. please welcome him. [applause] >> i remember flying and you are walking all around the building and your flight jacket and you inspired all of us to new heights. so just suck it up, john. [laughter] we look forward to coming back every year. it is an opportunity for us service chiefs to kind of share what is the latest in what is on our minds. i'm excited about that. i look forward to your questions. please go to the next slide. this is is not the "los angeles times" or the san francisco chronicle. these are places that earned the headlines even yesterday when we opened up "the washington post." you look at all those hotspots and it is yet to be seen how certain things will play
jim amos is the first aviator to be appointed to that position. he has gone through leadership on every level from the university of idaho and he has commanded every level he had to commanding squadrons he commanded air group 31 and the third marine air wing and the combat development command. and this happened to be the commandant of the marine corps gentlemen, thank you. please welcome him. [applause] >> i remember flying and you are walking all around the building and your flight...
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Sep 1, 2013
09/13
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white van members performed on stage with black men are his, something that was against the law in the jim crow south. so wait members were dark makeup and permit fair to pass for black. towards the end of the war, the speakers performed for troops in europe and refreshingly had no problems with race. lena horne performed at the uso during the war. when she prepared to step on the stage for a show in a southern state, she asked someone why there were no black soldiers in the audience. she was told she was seeing for the next day on a separate show. the next day she prepared to step on the stage to perform, she saw the black soldiers sitting in the back row and white men in the front seats. now who the are they, lena asks. they are german pows she was told. lena walked down to the back rows and performed facing the black soldiers with their pack to the german pows. this summer will commemorate the 50th anniversary of the march on washington. we generally think of the 1960s as the beginning of the civil rights move meant. however, the changes that came about in any teen 60s may not have happ
white van members performed on stage with black men are his, something that was against the law in the jim crow south. so wait members were dark makeup and permit fair to pass for black. towards the end of the war, the speakers performed for troops in europe and refreshingly had no problems with race. lena horne performed at the uso during the war. when she prepared to step on the stage for a show in a southern state, she asked someone why there were no black soldiers in the audience. she was...
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Jan 16, 2013
01/13
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jim used a number of statistics. one that struck me was 52% of the african population of the country is going in the right direction. my question to each of you is what is your view? is the country going in the right direction? are you optimistic or pessimistic as we look forward in the next two years and after two years. >> really -- um, the country is going in the right direction. um, people feel more confident about the way that the country is conducted. but as we mentioned, there has to be a relation of this. >> mr. riaz mohammad khan? >> yes, this was specifically new to me. but 52% of the people of afghanistan feel that the country is going into isolation because i don't know the relationship with pakistan. but one other thing -- some of the key occupations in terms of concerns which riaz mohammad khan mentioned, which said tayeb jawad mention. these are very common questions. questions about the future, which are asked in any other involvement of society i think there are definite positive signs -- five years
jim used a number of statistics. one that struck me was 52% of the african population of the country is going in the right direction. my question to each of you is what is your view? is the country going in the right direction? are you optimistic or pessimistic as we look forward in the next two years and after two years. >> really -- um, the country is going in the right direction. um, people feel more confident about the way that the country is conducted. but as we mentioned, there has...
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Mar 2, 2013
03/13
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there has been problem -- progress in congress, senator jim brand has been helpful to that. when the investigator, prosecution, the defense, the jury and the community is appointed and controls, we make no progress and as glad as i am that women are permitted in combat, my first fear is there will be more rates because there will be additional women to have the capacity to address in the military. we are better than that. i know women in the military who don't go to the bathroom in the middle of the night because sexual assault in a latrine is so common. this is unacceptable in the united states of america. you are going to be part of the solution. you brought a. you now have the responsibility. >> i am an epidemiologist. >> i love epidemiologists. epidemiologists! i got his slam dunk education by one of the greatest epidemiologists in world. it is numbers, it is facts. >> going back to the sexual violence and gender violence, what we talked about on college campuses, i found it hard, women get into power, women learn more xbox and are constantly brought back. how do we keep
there has been problem -- progress in congress, senator jim brand has been helpful to that. when the investigator, prosecution, the defense, the jury and the community is appointed and controls, we make no progress and as glad as i am that women are permitted in combat, my first fear is there will be more rates because there will be additional women to have the capacity to address in the military. we are better than that. i know women in the military who don't go to the bathroom in the middle...
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Jul 27, 2013
07/13
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maybe it was a jim webb piece. where you stretch the law or the rules. >> guest: i always stretch the law or the rules. but there is a difference between breaking in army regulation and breaking a law of our country and violating the constitution. that is why when i had become so frustrated over what was happening in vietnam, i did not shred the constitution. i stood and took the message to the people. because i believed, and this is the thing that hurt me, that we were a nation of the people, either people, and where the people. that is what our nation is all about isn't likely that. that is really kind of scary. they left the running of our government to the generals to the president and so on. so i believe that these cats need us to tell him what to do. if we think that they are in charge, we are making in the date because this country should be run by the people. that is what democracy is all about. c-span: you said earlier that general take their orders from civilians and the soldier takes his orders from the
maybe it was a jim webb piece. where you stretch the law or the rules. >> guest: i always stretch the law or the rules. but there is a difference between breaking in army regulation and breaking a law of our country and violating the constitution. that is why when i had become so frustrated over what was happening in vietnam, i did not shred the constitution. i stood and took the message to the people. because i believed, and this is the thing that hurt me, that we were a nation of the...
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Jun 2, 2013
06/13
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jim, you are the next caller. postcode that afternoon, gentlemen. i verity posted to one of the largest providers of service i'm also the war department in afghanistan. i asked him asked him how the afghan was going. i quote certain and mr. mark and he says it's basically a total failure and went into details about that aspect of what basic means. what do you think the result is basically in afghanistan? >> guest: it's a lot of people's minds now. i think there's no dispute that the optimistic assessments years ago of what could be possible as stability and peace and a strong central government is not going to be the case. most people admit that. the question is whether a year from now will be security forces to to the extent that when the united states leaves, what would be the strength of the taliban? what will be the strength of the government of hamid tarzana? these divisions inside the government in kabul. people certainly do for good reason i ask, was this worth a? is too easy declare, and what is possible has changed a lot from where we were
jim, you are the next caller. postcode that afternoon, gentlemen. i verity posted to one of the largest providers of service i'm also the war department in afghanistan. i asked him asked him how the afghan was going. i quote certain and mr. mark and he says it's basically a total failure and went into details about that aspect of what basic means. what do you think the result is basically in afghanistan? >> guest: it's a lot of people's minds now. i think there's no dispute that the...
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Jul 4, 2013
07/13
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then there was one named jim hudson and i talked to him and we said we have to have a real labor guy, someone who negotiates and contracts and sells them to the rank and file. so we found a guy who really knows manpower training. we have to get somebody that's worked in the area of how to deal with discrimination in the workplace. so he knows the market. anyway, i get a lot of these people wind up and president nixon thought to that there would show progress in his administration. so he said why don't you bring them to the hotel and we will introduce them to the press. so we have a meeting, it goes well and i interview them to the press. then they ask all kind of questions and was obvious he was a pro. someone in the back of the room holds his hand up and says are you a democrat or republican? i've never been asked that. he said i'm a democrat. it's a dazzling to read the same month of his hand up and says i'm a democrat. the last one. arthur burns was close to president nixon. finally we have a republican. so i asked him the question and he stands there like a camel chewing and final
then there was one named jim hudson and i talked to him and we said we have to have a real labor guy, someone who negotiates and contracts and sells them to the rank and file. so we found a guy who really knows manpower training. we have to get somebody that's worked in the area of how to deal with discrimination in the workplace. so he knows the market. anyway, i get a lot of these people wind up and president nixon thought to that there would show progress in his administration. so he said...
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Jan 6, 2013
01/13
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what is much more worrisome of course racist rules that is what jim crow was state-sponsored extern regime so it was imperative and then with those laws laws that ban interracial marriage but one white man married in african-american woman within society clamps down. but then the police came into my bedroom and arrested them. that is what you talk about. with certain times and places it happened across the board so they should get rid of that extra no coercion as the court said it was there a fundamental right will always struggle now is gays and lesbians to exercise their right to marry. with the extra no coercion. it is hard to imagine because they do not tell them they cannot apply for jobs. but it denies certain avenues of the employment and education. that is one reason i am so against external coercion. get rid of the ban then we're left with parents and friends that is bad that we can deal with that. >> a one to ask how you balance -- with the german courts? >> there is a curious parallel between female genital mutilation which is serious because as practiced in much of africa is ve
what is much more worrisome of course racist rules that is what jim crow was state-sponsored extern regime so it was imperative and then with those laws laws that ban interracial marriage but one white man married in african-american woman within society clamps down. but then the police came into my bedroom and arrested them. that is what you talk about. with certain times and places it happened across the board so they should get rid of that extra no coercion as the court said it was there a...
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Apr 21, 2013
04/13
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my name is jim rainey, more recently a political writer at "the l.a. times." the couple announcements, everyone should turn off their cell phones. probably turn them off, even if they're on vibrate. richard is particularly sensitive. is a cell phone goes off, he will hunt you down and correct it. after the session, there are going to be signing of the folks here about today and the signing area is area one, which you can look on a map where someone will direct you. you're also not opposed to record this. i'm going to introduce the three panelists, starting in the middle with jon wiener. john teaches at you see irvine and has contributed an editor to the nation agassi. he also is a weekly radio program wednesdays at 4:00 p.m. on 90.7 fm. he is best known for suing the fbi for their files on john lennon. that story was told in the book, give me some truth, the john lennon ei trials. his most recent book is how we forgot the cold war, historical journey across america, which you can pick up later and get signed to john. that is john in the middle. next we've got
my name is jim rainey, more recently a political writer at "the l.a. times." the couple announcements, everyone should turn off their cell phones. probably turn them off, even if they're on vibrate. richard is particularly sensitive. is a cell phone goes off, he will hunt you down and correct it. after the session, there are going to be signing of the folks here about today and the signing area is area one, which you can look on a map where someone will direct you. you're also not...
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Nov 3, 2013
11/13
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. >> my name's jim keating, i'm a pediatrician. if you hook at it from the point of view of the oplation, then the average -- population, then the average people are the reason that we get along. if the top people were asked to do all of the procedures, ten they wouldn't be the top people, or their performance would be not. so the top people owe a lot to the average folks. and the population in general owes a lot to the average people. so, you know, i think that focusing on the individual as you have is a good spur to all of us, i think. but if we're planning to have the kids better off, we have to accept the fact that the average folks are the people that are doing good, doing most of the good for the people. the top people only see a small number of folks. the middle people see a lot. so if we're looking for the greater good, we ought to go for strengthening the average. >> i think there's something that's deeply important about what you said, and i didn't get to talk about it very much. the, number one, we're in a country where
. >> my name's jim keating, i'm a pediatrician. if you hook at it from the point of view of the oplation, then the average -- population, then the average people are the reason that we get along. if the top people were asked to do all of the procedures, ten they wouldn't be the top people, or their performance would be not. so the top people owe a lot to the average folks. and the population in general owes a lot to the average people. so, you know, i think that focusing on the individual...
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Jan 1, 2013
01/13
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[laughter] a couple of things about jim. is now retired. the only channel i know who retired and enrolled in a ph.d at johns hopkins in philosophy, which is a interesting degree. but jim said you would need to think more on the rule of civilians. he was totally right. in the rewrite of the book is became a major theme. what works, what doesn't work. marshall and was up to me as a model of good civil-military relations, good discourse. they are not particularly friendly spin you say marshall we refuse to have dinner with -- >> didn't like having dinner with them. refuse to laugh at their jokes when fdr referred to as george. he made it clear to his name was general marshall. the first time that marshall ever went to hyde park, roosevelt's home, was for his funeral to be a pallbearer. he kept his distance. yes he was selected for the job because he was candid with roosevelt. before is on the chief of staff, he was a brigadier in the oval office and basically was the kind of blows them off and he says wait a minute, you need to hear me out her
[laughter] a couple of things about jim. is now retired. the only channel i know who retired and enrolled in a ph.d at johns hopkins in philosophy, which is a interesting degree. but jim said you would need to think more on the rule of civilians. he was totally right. in the rewrite of the book is became a major theme. what works, what doesn't work. marshall and was up to me as a model of good civil-military relations, good discourse. they are not particularly friendly spin you say marshall we...
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Jan 20, 2013
01/13
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so for them once he removed these jim crow barriers their agenda is gone. then there's just a matter and in fact at that point they are overqualified. opportunities are going to open up because now they're no longer facing explicitly racial barriers. jobs are opening up. so, for them they don't need the black movement. for the black poor, the movement is just beginning. getting the vote, getting the right to go into a restaurant and go into a hotel. if you are poor, what if you have you gained? >> host: a larger amount of blacks are still poor and there is the silence. >> guest: well i think one thing that happened before that is people who came out of the middle class saw their responsibility to go and help mobilize those who were poor and destitute. that is what sncc was. the college students. the sons and grandsons and granddaughters of the black peasants. people like myself. my mother grew up in rural florida and in segregated schools. >> host: where was your father? was he from tennessee? >> guest: originally from alabama but he was part of that lot mi
so for them once he removed these jim crow barriers their agenda is gone. then there's just a matter and in fact at that point they are overqualified. opportunities are going to open up because now they're no longer facing explicitly racial barriers. jobs are opening up. so, for them they don't need the black movement. for the black poor, the movement is just beginning. getting the vote, getting the right to go into a restaurant and go into a hotel. if you are poor, what if you have you gained?...
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Jan 5, 2013
01/13
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has a few things about the jim crow south. talk about that conversation. >> well, when he was -- i was actually here in new york. i had just been on "the view." and was in a limo on the way to the airport with cnn when i received a call that was 404 area code, which is atlanta, so i answered that. and it was congressman john lewis. when we finished talking i thought i should check my text messages because i couldn't keep my voice mail clear enough to keep getting messages, and lo and be hold there was a message from the white house saying the president was trying to reach me. so, i called the number, and they wanted to arrange the call. so, -- so interesting, these people in the immediate -- in media, the person who was in the car with me from cnn, pulled out a camcorder. i said, you cannot tape me while i'm talking to the president. so i made her turn it off and put it away. [applause] >> so, he started out by saying, you're a hard person to reach. well, everyone knew i had been with cnn all week. i didn't say that to him, th
has a few things about the jim crow south. talk about that conversation. >> well, when he was -- i was actually here in new york. i had just been on "the view." and was in a limo on the way to the airport with cnn when i received a call that was 404 area code, which is atlanta, so i answered that. and it was congressman john lewis. when we finished talking i thought i should check my text messages because i couldn't keep my voice mail clear enough to keep getting messages, and...
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Jan 27, 2013
01/13
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so for them, once you remove these jim crow barriers, their agenda is gone. in fact, at that point, they are overqualified. opportunities are going to open up because now they are no longer facing explicitly racial barriers. jobs are opening up. so for them, they don't need another movement. for the black poor, their movement is just beginning. getting there though, getting the right to go into a restaurant, going to a hotel. if you are poor, what have you gained? >> guest: >> host: but a large amount of us are still poor and there's the silence. >> guest: one thing that happened before that is people who came out of the middle class saw their responsibility to go and help them mobilize those who are poor and destitute. that was the college students, the sons and grandsons ingrained outers of the black peasants, people like myself. my mother grew up in rural florida and segregated schools, the whole works. >> host: who is your father? >> guest: a rich life alabama, was part of the black migration of it to detroit in world war i. at least it's fabulous. >> hos
so for them, once you remove these jim crow barriers, their agenda is gone. in fact, at that point, they are overqualified. opportunities are going to open up because now they are no longer facing explicitly racial barriers. jobs are opening up. so for them, they don't need another movement. for the black poor, their movement is just beginning. getting there though, getting the right to go into a restaurant, going to a hotel. if you are poor, what have you gained? >> guest: >> host:...
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Jan 21, 2013
01/13
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so for them, once you remove these jim crow barriers, their agenda is gone. then it's just a matter in fact at that point they are overqualified. opportunities are going to get opened up because they are now no longer facing explicitly racial barriers. jobs are opening up. so, for them they don't need another movement. for the black poor the movement is just beginning, getting the right to go into a restaurant, if you are poor what have you gained? >> host: but a large amount of us are still poor. >> guest: one thing that happened after that is the people that came out of the middle class solve the responsibility to go and help mobilize those that are poor and destitute. that's what sncc was. the college students, the sons and grandsons and granddaughters , people like myself. my mother grew up in rural florida and segregated schools. >> host: where was your father? >> guest: originally from alabama, she was part of the black migration. it was against racism. >> guest: that is directly from most people the peasant background, the right to freedom was sent by
so for them, once you remove these jim crow barriers, their agenda is gone. then it's just a matter in fact at that point they are overqualified. opportunities are going to get opened up because they are now no longer facing explicitly racial barriers. jobs are opening up. so, for them they don't need another movement. for the black poor the movement is just beginning, getting the right to go into a restaurant, if you are poor what have you gained? >> host: but a large amount of us are...
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Jan 21, 2013
01/13
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of brotherhood we have a black man in the white house but michele alexander is the author of the new jim crow she talks about statistics in the 21st century under employed and unemployed clear more afflicted with aids and obesity with tougher sentences for the same crimes but we have a black president and i think the silence in the black community is deafening we would protest everything after we got voting rights and we wanted more. leidy think they are silent? >> you can see the difference of the support that king got when he was fighting for civil rights reform through 65 the level of support with the widespread support for what he was trying to do. after 1965 moving to chicago with garbage workers and for people he wanted to occupy the national mall. even during the occupy campaign in recent years no one point* something so for word with his support it went down dramatically. >> host: why? they thought it would make white people angry? >> guest: there was support for the early king for the black people doing well so for them once you remove the jim crow barriers come to the agenda is
of brotherhood we have a black man in the white house but michele alexander is the author of the new jim crow she talks about statistics in the 21st century under employed and unemployed clear more afflicted with aids and obesity with tougher sentences for the same crimes but we have a black president and i think the silence in the black community is deafening we would protest everything after we got voting rights and we wanted more. leidy think they are silent? >> you can see the...
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Sep 8, 2013
09/13
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white band members performed onstage with black members, something that was against the law in the jim crow south. so white members wore dark makeup and permed hair here to pass for blacks. toward the end of the war the sweethearts perform for troops in europe and refreshingly had no problems of race. lena horne performed with the uso during the war. when she prepared to step on stage for a show in the southern state she asks someone why there were no black soldiers in the audience. she was told she would sing for them the next day in a separate show. the next day as she prepared to step on the stage to perform she saw the black soldiers sitting in the backrooms and white man in the front seats. now, who the hell i they, she asked. german pows, shoes told. she walked down off the stage to the back row and performed facing the black soldiers with her back to the german parent of these. this summer will commemorate the 50th anniversary of the march on washington. we generally think of the 1960's as the beginning of the civil-rights movement. however, the changes that came about in the 19
white band members performed onstage with black members, something that was against the law in the jim crow south. so white members wore dark makeup and permed hair here to pass for blacks. toward the end of the war the sweethearts perform for troops in europe and refreshingly had no problems of race. lena horne performed with the uso during the war. when she prepared to step on stage for a show in the southern state she asks someone why there were no black soldiers in the audience. she was...
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Feb 3, 2013
02/13
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and the operators going hey, jim, great job. you know, all part of the team now. another case you go in to are foreign headquarter we pushed operators everywhere and rotated analysts so everybody operated forward and back part of the time. and we see a macho table. there would be a 22-year-old analysts saying you have to do x, x. he's taking it. because it became a -- he wasn't perfect. it took years for us to get to. don't get me wrong. there were starts and stops. it was key because suddenly everybody owned the problem. >> right. one of the things you also touch on in your weak is sort of the evolution of the integration. which is a hot topic here. you mentioned that early on that there was a use of these enhanced integration methods. about the can you talk about that a little bit? >> sure. how many people ever run a prison or integration facility? [laughter] that's how many we had in my command. [laughter] and you think about it, go back to 9/11, and the first response is okay, what do we do? how do we do this? we start capturing serious terrorists. what do you
and the operators going hey, jim, great job. you know, all part of the team now. another case you go in to are foreign headquarter we pushed operators everywhere and rotated analysts so everybody operated forward and back part of the time. and we see a macho table. there would be a 22-year-old analysts saying you have to do x, x. he's taking it. because it became a -- he wasn't perfect. it took years for us to get to. don't get me wrong. there were starts and stops. it was key because suddenly...
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Aug 14, 2013
08/13
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david, former colleague of jim my question tracks along the point that jim raised, this is hardly an and stuart. as part of the fundamental basis of what you're talking about, which is planning from the beginning, looking for to get in, get out quickly, i would hold actually that that's the wrong approach. once you start thinking you have to plan to lead from the beginning and launcher focuses on reducing, then rather than focusing on the exit so quickly and exit at the income you're missing the opportunity to get things right. and i would say that over and over again we have made the mistakes of planning to leave too soon, having to short term of a vision over and over. i would wonder if that is played into your thinking at all? >> i'm retired from both the u.s. government and cna now. since egypt is going to settle its own thing with some diplomatic help bias and syria is hopeless, the next country is yemen. and some occasion in the past on separate occasions i asked egyptian generals to tell me about their experience. they wouldn't talk to me. should we go into yemen? [laughter] >
david, former colleague of jim my question tracks along the point that jim raised, this is hardly an and stuart. as part of the fundamental basis of what you're talking about, which is planning from the beginning, looking for to get in, get out quickly, i would hold actually that that's the wrong approach. once you start thinking you have to plan to lead from the beginning and launcher focuses on reducing, then rather than focusing on the exit so quickly and exit at the income you're missing...
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Apr 1, 2013
04/13
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jim,0 interests have been profiting. if you turn the clock back to the 80s, there's some people who have argued -- and i haven't seen come -- compelling evidence -- the cia encouraged cultivation to help fund the resistance. we do know that poppy funds back then were used to help fight the soviets. and like with the overall growth of the antisoviet jihad, some of then was helpful a generation ago comes back to bite the afghan people and u.s. interests in the current environment. >> i'd like to know a little bit about president obama's feelings towards the military? has it evolved? what was his relationship earlier and what is it now? >> guest: that's a great question. and i think the president's relationship with the military operates on two different levels. there's sort of the -- the relationship with the southeastern-most commanders and the relationship with the grunts, the men and women really doing the fighting. i'll take the latter one first. the president and the vice president and their spouses have a real genuin
jim,0 interests have been profiting. if you turn the clock back to the 80s, there's some people who have argued -- and i haven't seen come -- compelling evidence -- the cia encouraged cultivation to help fund the resistance. we do know that poppy funds back then were used to help fight the soviets. and like with the overall growth of the antisoviet jihad, some of then was helpful a generation ago comes back to bite the afghan people and u.s. interests in the current environment. >> i'd...
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Feb 10, 2013
02/13
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. >> i have spoken with the secretary of state, jim baker, who reported to me on his nearly seven hours of conversations with the iraqi foreign minister. secretary baker method it clear that he discerned no evidence whatsoever that iraq was willing to comply with the international community's demand to withdraw from kuwait and comply with the ud nations resolutions. let me emphasizes that i have not given up on a peaceful outcome. it's not too late. the choice of peace or war is really saddam hussein's to make. >> just two hours ago allied air most began attacks on military targets in iraq good kuwait. these attacks continue as i speak. ground forces are not engaged. ♪ >> israel is not a participant. israel is not a combatant, and this man i elected to launch a terroristic attack. >> when the soviet union made such a strong statement, that was very reassuring and we're in close touch with our coalition partners and this coalition is not going to fall apart. >> now with remarkable technological advances like the patriot missile, we can defend against ballistic missile attacks aimed at
. >> i have spoken with the secretary of state, jim baker, who reported to me on his nearly seven hours of conversations with the iraqi foreign minister. secretary baker method it clear that he discerned no evidence whatsoever that iraq was willing to comply with the international community's demand to withdraw from kuwait and comply with the ud nations resolutions. let me emphasizes that i have not given up on a peaceful outcome. it's not too late. the choice of peace or war is really...
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Oct 16, 2013
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despite the fact that as jim pointed out freed rick hayek himself talked about the dairnlgt of monopoly and cartel, many people do not understand the need -- sometimes for a little bit of government action to breakthrough and open a market to competition. all right. well, bashing your head against the wall repeatedly gets to be a little bit tiring. in this report, there's a very different approach. and one of our key recommendations is via the existing fuel economy system, automakers have to meet very, very tough fuel economy standards. this is not easy. it's existing law and it's to be quite expensive to meet the standards. i know, the environmental movement said peace on earth and good will toward men will result from this. the fact it's going raise the price for seek -- vehicles and tough for automakers to do. one of the approaches we suggest is if you make at least half of the cars in your fleet some sort of fuel competitive vehicle. lek fied vehicle. a flex fuel it has to be gasoline. nobody thought of yet but allow fuel competition. if you make at least half of them competitive, t
despite the fact that as jim pointed out freed rick hayek himself talked about the dairnlgt of monopoly and cartel, many people do not understand the need -- sometimes for a little bit of government action to breakthrough and open a market to competition. all right. well, bashing your head against the wall repeatedly gets to be a little bit tiring. in this report, there's a very different approach. and one of our key recommendations is via the existing fuel economy system, automakers have to...
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May 10, 2013
05/13
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jim? >> thanks very much, andy. just let me add my thanks to congressman thorn berry for sponsoring today's events and for his kind words and, secretary reid, we really are grateful to have you here today. and it's been a wonderful collaborative experience over the last year. one of the things that i think really helped us is we started the study a year ago is just people's willingness to open their kimonos and share with us the good, the bad, the ugly. and one of the things that was great is that we didn't come across a unitary voice, but we heard a cacophony of sound coming from the community. and i think that really does credit to the spire community. but thank -- to the entire community. but thanks for sharing ideas and arguing with us and also just providing just incredible access across the community. as congressman thornberry said earlier, we really face, you know, several challenges, and especially when you're sitting on capitol hill, first and foremost in your minds perhaps these days is our budgetary situa
jim? >> thanks very much, andy. just let me add my thanks to congressman thorn berry for sponsoring today's events and for his kind words and, secretary reid, we really are grateful to have you here today. and it's been a wonderful collaborative experience over the last year. one of the things that i think really helped us is we started the study a year ago is just people's willingness to open their kimonos and share with us the good, the bad, the ugly. and one of the things that was...
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Oct 17, 2013
10/13
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there is no chance to succeed without breaking. >> thanks, jim. i'll just note the usual roundtable rules. if you want to break in and speak can't just turn your card over on its side, and those of you that are not at the table, if you have an urgent -- wave your hand or your card and i will make every effort to bring into the conversation. you know, one of the myths that exists in energy policy making is that we import a great deal of oil from the middle east, from the persian gulf in specific but if you look throughout our history we have never imported more than 15% of our oil needs from the persian gulf. right now we are at 9%. as we heard earlier what we are importing from the middle east, what we are importing from opec countries is the price of oil. the energy security paradox really is that we can see the oil import levels dropping down. the price of oil has steadily gone up and up. reducing imports hasn't helped us reduce the price of oil because it is a sponge will economy. is a global market. oil market is like a swimming pool. it doesn
there is no chance to succeed without breaking. >> thanks, jim. i'll just note the usual roundtable rules. if you want to break in and speak can't just turn your card over on its side, and those of you that are not at the table, if you have an urgent -- wave your hand or your card and i will make every effort to bring into the conversation. you know, one of the myths that exists in energy policy making is that we import a great deal of oil from the middle east, from the persian gulf in...
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Oct 17, 2013
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. >> next i but like to introduce the former congressmen, head of a budget, jim nussle. >> thank you. that is impossible to follow. and maybe i shouldn't even try. but i followed you a few times, so i will -- both as the chairman of the budget committee and omb. and i'm proud of the tenure that you have the experience and the dedication and example of public service. again, you show it here today. and i think you for joining us that this important moment. this is not a proud moment for our country. even with the good news of an agreement, we can all look forward and see a couple of different paths that could easily develop. one is just as negative as the one that we have recently been on that could by january 15th or february 7th of evolves into yet another crisis, stalemate another juncture that would be proven just as damaging as the one that we have been through or a path where cool heads can prevail, some experience and judgment and leadership and people that want to govern as secretary panetta said. people want to step up and realize that the whole is greater than the sum that th
. >> next i but like to introduce the former congressmen, head of a budget, jim nussle. >> thank you. that is impossible to follow. and maybe i shouldn't even try. but i followed you a few times, so i will -- both as the chairman of the budget committee and omb. and i'm proud of the tenure that you have the experience and the dedication and example of public service. again, you show it here today. and i think you for joining us that this important moment. this is not a proud moment...
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Feb 24, 2013
02/13
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jim mentioned just now that he says i don't think it's about hypocrisy. in some ways he's right, but in some ways i feel it's so much of a hypocrisy that i don't even have to say it. why tell people the obvious thing in that sense? the last thing i'll say about your comments is that far better job than i can in terms of deciphering american moral outrage is the book, "hellfire nation," which when i first arrived at brown, within a year or two, he published it, gave me a copy. it's actually significantly fatter than this book. [laughter] and i'll be honest, it was in some ways inspirational. i mean, here was a colleague who had rewritten american history over centuries through the narrative of moralizing and moral discourse and focusing mostly on religion. and lightbulbs went off in my held, and we had many drinks and dinners over this. it's like i can tell a more political economy story over various forms of smuggling. so where we actually overlap in this history is the come stock story, the sex trafficking, and the antipornography and the birth control e
jim mentioned just now that he says i don't think it's about hypocrisy. in some ways he's right, but in some ways i feel it's so much of a hypocrisy that i don't even have to say it. why tell people the obvious thing in that sense? the last thing i'll say about your comments is that far better job than i can in terms of deciphering american moral outrage is the book, "hellfire nation," which when i first arrived at brown, within a year or two, he published it, gave me a copy. it's...
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Feb 1, 2013
02/13
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. >> look, i think there is at least one more than who with thinks about iran 24/7, jim mathers, the head of central command. of course, for his obsession he's being asked to retire early, but while he's in command, you know, arguably he's letting other parts of his area of operations be the bill payers for that. when you look at it from the position of the u.s. navy, it's not pivoting to the pacific, it's parking its aircraft carriers either in the persian gulf or in the open waters off the persian gulf. that's where the navy is today, or thiess the high- at least the high-end navy. it's not part of our, you know, i mean, again, we are happy to look the other way, but it just shows you that with the limitedover all size of -- overall size of our or force today and the limited amount of resource we have, we are not fully resourcing afghanistan or doing any of the other things that perhaps we should be doing or ought at least be able to do across the greater middle east, notre are we switching -- neither are we switching, pivoting to the pacific. so when you only have, you know, a sin
. >> look, i think there is at least one more than who with thinks about iran 24/7, jim mathers, the head of central command. of course, for his obsession he's being asked to retire early, but while he's in command, you know, arguably he's letting other parts of his area of operations be the bill payers for that. when you look at it from the position of the u.s. navy, it's not pivoting to the pacific, it's parking its aircraft carriers either in the persian gulf or in the open waters off...
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Jul 4, 2013
07/13
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then there was one named jim hudson and i talked to him and we said we have to have a real labor guy, someone who negotiates and contracts and sells them to the rank and file. so we found a guy who really knows manpower training. we have to get somebody that's worked in the area of how to deal with discrimination in the workplace. so he knows the market. anyway, i get a lot of these people wind up and president nixon thought to that there would show progress in his administration. so he said why don't you bring them to the hotel and we will introduce them to the press. so we have a meeting, it goes well and i interview them to the press. then they ask all kind of questions and was obvious he was a pro. someone in the back of the room holds his hand up and says are you a democrat or republican? i've never been asked that. he said i'm a democrat. it's a dazzling to read the same month of his hand up and says i'm a democrat. the last one. arthur burns was close to president nixon. finally we have a republican. so i asked him the question and he stands there like a camel chewing and final
then there was one named jim hudson and i talked to him and we said we have to have a real labor guy, someone who negotiates and contracts and sells them to the rank and file. so we found a guy who really knows manpower training. we have to get somebody that's worked in the area of how to deal with discrimination in the workplace. so he knows the market. anyway, i get a lot of these people wind up and president nixon thought to that there would show progress in his administration. so he said...
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Oct 22, 2013
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we have a police chief in jim. what i'm going do is take my experience and my relationship to make sure that when somebody is arrested for a gun crime if they can be prosecuted more. >> the only way to reduce crime is -- community policing. sustainable neighborhood. my plan is focused directly where the problems are. in the neighborhoods where the people live. >> i'll come back to my same thing. it you have crime plan, you have been sheriff for four years. what have you done to make this city safer? you have all kinds of talk. let's say we stick 139 officers who are going solve the street-like crime and the booned house problem. what is going to happen? you haven't fixed the street light and the abandoned houses. you have 139 houses sitting on hold dialing in and out of street light that is out. or -- those need to be on the street responding to calls. >> i've done in more one as a police officer in the city than he's done in a lifetime. let me start with that. the fact is that the only way we're doing reduce crime
we have a police chief in jim. what i'm going do is take my experience and my relationship to make sure that when somebody is arrested for a gun crime if they can be prosecuted more. >> the only way to reduce crime is -- community policing. sustainable neighborhood. my plan is focused directly where the problems are. in the neighborhoods where the people live. >> i'll come back to my same thing. it you have crime plan, you have been sheriff for four years. what have you done to make...
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Jan 2, 2013
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jim dudek is the exception to every i'm saying tonight about generals by the way. a couple of things about jim dudek district may, now retired the only channel i know who upon retirement wrote in a phd program in john hopkinson philosophy, which is an interesting career move. but in review of my manuscript cecchini to think more in the role of civilians and he was totally right and in the rewrite, this became a major theme. both works, what doesn't work? marshland was developed as a model is good relations, good discourse. not particularly friendly. >> eisai marshal refuse to dinner. >> refuse to laugh at his jokes come when fdr refers to miss church coming he makes it clear his name is general marshall and the first time marshall ever went to hyde park, roosevelts home, was for his hero to be a pallbearer. he kept his distance commedia was selected for the job because he was candid with roosevelt. before army chief of staff, brigadier in the oval office and basically roosevelt was was a month since his fate a minute, unique to hear me out here. he deciliters chief
jim dudek is the exception to every i'm saying tonight about generals by the way. a couple of things about jim dudek district may, now retired the only channel i know who upon retirement wrote in a phd program in john hopkinson philosophy, which is an interesting career move. but in review of my manuscript cecchini to think more in the role of civilians and he was totally right and in the rewrite, this became a major theme. both works, what doesn't work? marshland was developed as a model is...
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Jan 9, 2013
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. >> jim landers of the morning news. you mentioned a few times in your speech the potential oil shale in utah, colorado, and whatnot. i haven't heard much about that lately. are you anticipating something in terms of cost break on that? or what is coming? >> no. there's nothing new to report on that other than, jim, to point out potential for vast energy resource here in the united. a lot of people don't realize the breadth of the scope we through modern technology and breaking technology of or dison tal drilling. now it's economic. we think about oil shale, t good reminder and antidote factor those three states alone, utah, wisconsin, and colorado, we after potential oil three times than saudi arabia with the proven reserve. the simple message is not that any breakthrough occurred. we have a great future opportunity in lots of different ways by continuing the investment and technologies in the potential development for the resources. that's why we mentioned it. >> hi, penny. [inaudible conversations] i wanted to ask you
. >> jim landers of the morning news. you mentioned a few times in your speech the potential oil shale in utah, colorado, and whatnot. i haven't heard much about that lately. are you anticipating something in terms of cost break on that? or what is coming? >> no. there's nothing new to report on that other than, jim, to point out potential for vast energy resource here in the united. a lot of people don't realize the breadth of the scope we through modern technology and breaking...
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Jun 23, 2013
06/13
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norm, two times, william, two times, jim two times, charlie peters two times, louis let, three times, bob herbert six time, and pall crudeman 21 times, victor one time, and once a frequent guest has not been on since january 2005. this was written in 2011. do you know how few over the air interview shows there are in this country? i mean, you can't count them. they are less than fingers on one hamid. you have amy goodman, charlie rose and bill moyers, it's almost zero so when one of the three has this tilt, not to mention the ceos that get on that show, it's not a minor derivation of the public's right to know a variety of viewpoints. frustration leads to creativity when you are a columnist. how many times have we heard the words "war on terrorism"? endless. it's the big business. trillions of dollars are in contracts and all kinds of things. i mean, it's a huge pump of the gdp. instead of public works, we have a war on terrorism, and except that the -- if you define "terrorism" as in discriminate attacks on civilian population, there's another form of terrorism that almost gets no at
norm, two times, william, two times, jim two times, charlie peters two times, louis let, three times, bob herbert six time, and pall crudeman 21 times, victor one time, and once a frequent guest has not been on since january 2005. this was written in 2011. do you know how few over the air interview shows there are in this country? i mean, you can't count them. they are less than fingers on one hamid. you have amy goodman, charlie rose and bill moyers, it's almost zero so when one of the three...
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Oct 13, 2013
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there was a transplanting of jim crow and racial segregation that may not have existed in that part of the country beforehand. so is it, you know, a militarization of civilian life, or is it, you know, either because of expediency or just plain and simple, like, racial bias? is it just a reflection of the hierarchy of society at that particular time? i mean, you know, you've had racial inequality all over the country, but the military historically has had a lot of southern -- >> right, yes. >> you know, leaders. >> i think richland is more like downtown baltimore and -- [inaudible] right? it's the difference between a blighted, older area that is no longer, you know, you can't even get a loan there anymore -- and the brand new suburb where everybody wants to live who can. and that sort of kind of segregation far more than, you know, the southern sort of segregation which is neighborhood by neighborhood and institution by institution, that kind of spatial segregation occurred in the postwar period and all over the country. not just in the south. you had a question back there. >> what's
there was a transplanting of jim crow and racial segregation that may not have existed in that part of the country beforehand. so is it, you know, a militarization of civilian life, or is it, you know, either because of expediency or just plain and simple, like, racial bias? is it just a reflection of the hierarchy of society at that particular time? i mean, you know, you've had racial inequality all over the country, but the military historically has had a lot of southern -- >> right,...
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Jul 20, 2013
07/13
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yes, i do appreciate having played baseball with jim all the years, and my first twelve years there, we always lost because the republicans were better. then sed rick rich month got e leshted in louisiana he's young and can throw over 80 miles per hour. which doesn't happen very often. now we win. 22-0 this time, as a matter of fact. [applause] i appreciate it. i came at the issue from variety of different angle. number one, i've been on the armed service democratic national committee for seventeen years. i chaired the terrorism subcommittee which had jurisdiction over a special operation command. i got to travel around the world to a variety of different conflict zones obviously iraq and afghanistan. many places in africa and philippines and others to sort of see what our department of defense would do try to keep the peace and move forward with stability. at the same time, in the state of washington we have an incredible presence of development agencies. the gates foundation being the most obvious. but path and variety others as well. they pulled me in and started try to see what w
yes, i do appreciate having played baseball with jim all the years, and my first twelve years there, we always lost because the republicans were better. then sed rick rich month got e leshted in louisiana he's young and can throw over 80 miles per hour. which doesn't happen very often. now we win. 22-0 this time, as a matter of fact. [applause] i appreciate it. i came at the issue from variety of different angle. number one, i've been on the armed service democratic national committee for...
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May 5, 2013
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if history plays tricks, southern congressional power in the last era of jim crow was a big one. the ability of the new deal to come around the most hedonistic readerships by reshaping liberal democracy required accommodating the most violent and a liberal part, keeping the south and site became a democracy. while that would be folly to argue members of the southern wing of the democratic party is known determine the choice is the deal made, their relative cohesion and assessment of policy choices through the filter of an anxious protection of white supremacy often prove decisive. the triumph in short cannot be severed from the sorrow. liberal democracy pat with racial humiliation and system of lawful exclusion principle terror, each constituted the other bankunited togo of the soul and body this combination can or is a larger message, a lesson that concerns persistence of emergency, and escape the ability of moral ambiguity, perhaps the inevitability of a politics that discomforting allies. it also reminds us not just whether, but how we find our way truly matters. thank you ver
if history plays tricks, southern congressional power in the last era of jim crow was a big one. the ability of the new deal to come around the most hedonistic readerships by reshaping liberal democracy required accommodating the most violent and a liberal part, keeping the south and site became a democracy. while that would be folly to argue members of the southern wing of the democratic party is known determine the choice is the deal made, their relative cohesion and assessment of policy...
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Apr 28, 2013
04/13
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former senator jim demint said you need to vote against obamacare. need to break the obama administration. senator mcconnell, the senate majority leader of the runs, announcing announcing in 2010 his highest priority as the senate majority leader was making barack obama a one-term president. now, if he had a coalition presidency where each party knew it would elect a partner, it wouldn't stand to gain as much power through tactics. they would still share the white house with the other party. then it would be freer to judge legislative proposals. so to put it another way, when you have winner take all elections, for presidencies whose power has grown to the level of imperial presidency, we shouldn't be surprised if we have high levels of partisan conflict. i if you go back, the increase in partisan conflict, going back to the 50s and 60s, there was much more of a working across party lines, and if you look at a graph of partisan conflict that's risen since 40s and 50s, gradually to levels we have today, well, presidential power has increased at the sa
former senator jim demint said you need to vote against obamacare. need to break the obama administration. senator mcconnell, the senate majority leader of the runs, announcing announcing in 2010 his highest priority as the senate majority leader was making barack obama a one-term president. now, if he had a coalition presidency where each party knew it would elect a partner, it wouldn't stand to gain as much power through tactics. they would still share the white house with the other party....
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Apr 2, 2013
04/13
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anyone -- the cost-benefit analysis and jim might have comment on this. but looking at the cost-benefit analysis that the agency has put together it simply not accurate. it doesn't take in to account the real cost that travelers suffer. the agency seems to be believe it's expensive to opt out of the machine. where is the classification for how expensive it is for people to opt out of travel via airfare. a lot of people after the machines started to be put in to place began to travel by car and train and there is a cost to that. so to look at that cost-benefit analysis and take it apart. the agency hasn't taken it apart. the agency has put forth the most favorable position that it can possibly put fort on the machines. to really look at accurate sei and the description of the capability of the machines. to look at the impact of the agency's screening program on travelers with prosthetic and other medical devices. the machines are designed to pick up anomaly. a lot of those, you know, cool on os i bags. to take a look at the layered approach the tsa say it
anyone -- the cost-benefit analysis and jim might have comment on this. but looking at the cost-benefit analysis that the agency has put together it simply not accurate. it doesn't take in to account the real cost that travelers suffer. the agency seems to be believe it's expensive to opt out of the machine. where is the classification for how expensive it is for people to opt out of travel via airfare. a lot of people after the machines started to be put in to place began to travel by car and...
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Nov 22, 2013
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and i just second what jim kim said about africa. africa's continued to grow at 5%. it's largely based on exploitation of natural resources, but there's more than that going on in quite a few countries, and it's well worth looking at. and lastly, latin america is divided in two; countries doing the right things, countries not doing the right things. the ones not doing the right things don't look especially good right now. that's venezuela in particular. so even there we see the same fact that you'd better get your policies straightened out, and i hope they to it. >> okay, glenn hubbard, so we have an optimist and i would say cautiously pessimistic, stan fischer. where are you on this? >> i would say caution as well. certainly, the easy credit has been largely responsible for an emerging market boom as has china's own development. i think that stan is absolutely right, that the policies are paramount. you know, there's so much attention now being paid to tapering and fed policy in the u.s. with spillover to the emerging world, that's a bit like to torture jerry baker'
and i just second what jim kim said about africa. africa's continued to grow at 5%. it's largely based on exploitation of natural resources, but there's more than that going on in quite a few countries, and it's well worth looking at. and lastly, latin america is divided in two; countries doing the right things, countries not doing the right things. the ones not doing the right things don't look especially good right now. that's venezuela in particular. so even there we see the same fact that...
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Feb 3, 2013
02/13
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and the operator's going, hey, jim, great job. you know, all part of the team now. another case you'd go into our forward headquarters which we pushed operators everywhere, and we rotated analysts so everybody operated forward and back. and i'd see a big, macho operator leaning over a plywood table -- everything in the command was plywood -- and there'd be a 22-year-old female analyst weighed like 98 pounds, and she's got her finger in his chest saying when you do this, you've got to do x, x -- and he's taking it because it became a meritocracy. it wasn't perfect. this took years for us to get to, don't get me wrong. and there were stops and starts and constant stresses, but it was key because suddenly everybody owned the problem. >> right. one of the things you also touch on in your book is sort of the evolution of interrogation which is a very hot topic here. and you mention early on there was use of these enhanced interrogation methods. you evolved away from that. can you talk about that a little bit? >> sure. how many people here have ever run a prison or an int
and the operator's going, hey, jim, great job. you know, all part of the team now. another case you'd go into our forward headquarters which we pushed operators everywhere, and we rotated analysts so everybody operated forward and back. and i'd see a big, macho operator leaning over a plywood table -- everything in the command was plywood -- and there'd be a 22-year-old female analyst weighed like 98 pounds, and she's got her finger in his chest saying when you do this, you've got to do x, x --...
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Mar 29, 2013
03/13
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. >> jim, rutgers university. lots of economists, such as your friend rudy, from m.i.t. you mentioned are believers that competition is the hallmark of a country thriving, growing, including jobses, et. cetera. lots of economists, even before the euro was instituted argued they needed more competition rather than what a coordinated currency, et. cetera. they predicted a bad woes for europe under the euro. you mentioned a lot of the problems on the flip side of competition namely regulation. give us your perspective in terms of regulation and competition in the euro and government coordination. >> i think it's a good question. a lot needs to be done there. >> thank you. >> and i think that at the time that the euro was put together, and my good friend, professor at colombia, nobel prize winner had different views of how it was going to work out and what happened. that was not in his idea book because you've had regulation there. you need more deregulation. there's no doubt about it. in order get more competitively take a case going back to greece because when you take a l
. >> jim, rutgers university. lots of economists, such as your friend rudy, from m.i.t. you mentioned are believers that competition is the hallmark of a country thriving, growing, including jobses, et. cetera. lots of economists, even before the euro was instituted argued they needed more competition rather than what a coordinated currency, et. cetera. they predicted a bad woes for europe under the euro. you mentioned a lot of the problems on the flip side of competition namely...
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May 30, 2013
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but as they get older, it's true what jim said earlier. by the time they get to high school, they're bored. something about what happens at pre-k, kinder and first is something we have to try to harness and move it forward as they get older. >> i agree. and i think it's very important to give teachers time to play as well. i think we focus on what best practices and pedagogy look like for our kids, and sometimes we forget we need to treat teachers the same way and give them a chance to grow and explore and reconnect with the excitement that made them go into the propossession in the -- profession in the first place. so we need to really support our teachers and give them the tools they need to become inspired themselves. >> i agree, obviously, with what both of them say. i also feel like i think one of the best things for kids, especially high school kids to do, is kind of get messy and actually get involved in these career-oriented, project-based learning things and even get out of the school building. we send our kids out when they're se
but as they get older, it's true what jim said earlier. by the time they get to high school, they're bored. something about what happens at pre-k, kinder and first is something we have to try to harness and move it forward as they get older. >> i agree. and i think it's very important to give teachers time to play as well. i think we focus on what best practices and pedagogy look like for our kids, and sometimes we forget we need to treat teachers the same way and give them a chance to...
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May 4, 2013
05/13
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if you google ben's name you'll see he's been in what jim of the washington is calling -- [inaudible] i'm going ask you about it. where the wall "the wall street journal" is wrong about labor force participation. he's been sending e-mail back and forth. there's an been an exchange over the last four or five days. his point is while your information is interesting, it's not accurate. i think we disagree on the interpretation on the numbers than the numbers themselves. it was certainly a good natured feud. jim's take, and i'm sympathetic to this that this long-term decline in how many people are working or looking for work is more worrisome than maybe i've been given credit for. it's not about what happening over the last couple of years. but long-term decline is the result of a slowdown of the american labor force. and we have seen not only people retiring and young people staying in school but also even people in the prime of their working lives choosing not to work. and that reflects how weak the economy has been from a jobs stand point dating all the way back to the early 2000s. tha
if you google ben's name you'll see he's been in what jim of the washington is calling -- [inaudible] i'm going ask you about it. where the wall "the wall street journal" is wrong about labor force participation. he's been sending e-mail back and forth. there's an been an exchange over the last four or five days. his point is while your information is interesting, it's not accurate. i think we disagree on the interpretation on the numbers than the numbers themselves. it was certainly...
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Feb 9, 2013
02/13
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in the operation had occurred because of what the analyst said that in the operator is going, hey, jim, great job camino, all part of the team now. another case, you go into our forward headquarters of a gilroy and then see a big operator leaning over plywood table, everything in the command was plywood. they're would be a 22 year-old female analyst to weighed 98 pounds, and she has her finger in his chest saying, when you do is you have to have excess and he's taking it because it became a meritocracy. it was key because suddenly everybody of the problem. >> one of the things that you touched on in your book is the evolution of interrogation, which is a very hot topic, and you mentioned that early on there was the use of these enhanced interrogation methods. you evolved away from that. can you talk about that? >> how many people here have ever run a prison our interrogation facility? edison many we had in my command, and if you think about it come back to september 11th and the first response is what we do? we start capturing very serious terrorists. well, would bring the specialists
in the operation had occurred because of what the analyst said that in the operator is going, hey, jim, great job camino, all part of the team now. another case, you go into our forward headquarters of a gilroy and then see a big operator leaning over plywood table, everything in the command was plywood. they're would be a 22 year-old female analyst to weighed 98 pounds, and she has her finger in his chest saying, when you do is you have to have excess and he's taking it because it became a...
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Jun 26, 2013
06/13
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frank borman, jim, william anders, the first humans to outer the moon to describe what they saw and they read scripture from the book of genesis to the rest of us back here. later that night, they took a photo that would change the way we see and think about our world. it was an image of earth, beautiful, breathtaking, a glowing marble of blue oceans, green forests, mountains, clouds, rising over the surface of the moon. while the site of our planet from space might seem routine today, imagine what it looked like to those of us in our home seeing the planet for the first time. imagine what it looked like to children like me. even the astronauts were amazed. it make yows realize just what you have back there on earth. around the same time, we began exploring space, scientists were studying changes taking place in the earth's atmosphere. scientists have known since the 1800s that greenhouse gases like carbon dioxide trap heat and burning fossil fuels release those gases into the air. that was not news. in the late 1950s, the national weather service began measuring the levels of carbon dio
frank borman, jim, william anders, the first humans to outer the moon to describe what they saw and they read scripture from the book of genesis to the rest of us back here. later that night, they took a photo that would change the way we see and think about our world. it was an image of earth, beautiful, breathtaking, a glowing marble of blue oceans, green forests, mountains, clouds, rising over the surface of the moon. while the site of our planet from space might seem routine today, imagine...
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Jun 24, 2013
06/13
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and if you are inclined toward expectations of jim or doom has political utility, if it serves agendas or if it confirms personal beliefs of and times then it is -- it really affects us all the more. and so it is as much about our environment and perception as it is about what terrorist to. >> you can read more about brian jenkins reserved attitude toward the subject in this book. again, it is available on amazon both in hard copy end for dress like myself, but also on your e-reader. so i really do commend the book to you. i also just want to highlight that this is actually the first. we are double teaming you. this is the first in a couple of events similar to this that we planned house. on may 33 will be hosting christian carol who you may know is the editor of foreign policy magazine and will be talking about his new book which would set the crossroads of religion and the modern global economy which happened in 1979. i don't want to spoil the ending, but it happened in 1979. it's a wonderful book, and so i hope he will consider coming back to john s. before that, please join me in t
and if you are inclined toward expectations of jim or doom has political utility, if it serves agendas or if it confirms personal beliefs of and times then it is -- it really affects us all the more. and so it is as much about our environment and perception as it is about what terrorist to. >> you can read more about brian jenkins reserved attitude toward the subject in this book. again, it is available on amazon both in hard copy end for dress like myself, but also on your e-reader. so i...
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Jul 14, 2013
07/13
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wholesale model retailers would agree to set the price and the reason they were upset is in a gaunt -- jim is on wis discounting at the civic discount so they thought that model was not working and cutting into the business it would affect profit margins and the like but the agency model the publisher says the price the retailer tech takes a cut apple likes to take 30% that is what they did with the i bookstore so retailers cannot change the price but they can sell it to act as agent for the agency model may have given revenue to boost the profits and they felt apple or independent bookstores they gave them extra skin in the games actually went into of happening because prices for uniform across the board were in 2009 a -- 2,009 look-alike and designed would dominate. >> going back to the ruling talk about the five publishers grapple decided to hold out following this base and reintroduce the i books in 2010 gave customers much more choice to break the grip on the publishing industry and goes on to say we have done nothing wrong we will appeal the decision to think they will have a chance
wholesale model retailers would agree to set the price and the reason they were upset is in a gaunt -- jim is on wis discounting at the civic discount so they thought that model was not working and cutting into the business it would affect profit margins and the like but the agency model the publisher says the price the retailer tech takes a cut apple likes to take 30% that is what they did with the i bookstore so retailers cannot change the price but they can sell it to act as agent for the...
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Feb 16, 2013
02/13
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>> hi, jim casey, savannah. eisenhower may not have sent any troops into combat, but a lot of what he and his state department did certainly laid the groundwork for the disaster in vietnam starting with -- being installed as president and sending advisers over there in the late '50s. any comments on that? >> yeah, sure. eisenhower is not blameless on vietnam, but in 1954 when the french were failing there at dien bien phu, there was tremendous pressure to send in ground troops from his own, in fact, his own general wanted to use tactical nuclear weaponses as did secretary of state john foster dulles as did richard nixon. and eisenhower said if we send troops, the jungle will consume an army birdie visions. i mean -- by divisions. i mean, he knew how badly an asian land war can go. and his view always was -- he was an all or nothing guy. now, it is true -- and dulles had a lot to do with this -- that when the french got driven out and vietnam was split into two, we backed the south, and we did start putting advis
>> hi, jim casey, savannah. eisenhower may not have sent any troops into combat, but a lot of what he and his state department did certainly laid the groundwork for the disaster in vietnam starting with -- being installed as president and sending advisers over there in the late '50s. any comments on that? >> yeah, sure. eisenhower is not blameless on vietnam, but in 1954 when the french were failing there at dien bien phu, there was tremendous pressure to send in ground troops from...
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Feb 14, 2013
02/13
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i would like to turn to my colleague and friend deputy attorney general jim cole. [applause] >> thank you. thank you all for being here today for this very important announcement. last year the administration made its views on the importance of privacy and civil liberties clear during the deliberation on the cybersecured of legislation. cybersecurity and privacy are not mutually exclusive. also affirmed its commitment and i quote again the sharing of information must be conducted in a manner that preserve the americans privacy, data confidentiality and civil liberties. as you heard from everyone here today this is a foundational peace, everyone supports this as we go forward. today as we rollout the executive order on improving critically infrastructure cyber security, just as resolute about adhering to those ideals. as deputy secretary luke and general alexander emphasized, one of the most import aspect of the executive order and improving government mechanisms for providing timely cyber3 information to the private sector and for example the executive order explic
i would like to turn to my colleague and friend deputy attorney general jim cole. [applause] >> thank you. thank you all for being here today for this very important announcement. last year the administration made its views on the importance of privacy and civil liberties clear during the deliberation on the cybersecured of legislation. cybersecurity and privacy are not mutually exclusive. also affirmed its commitment and i quote again the sharing of information must be conducted in a...